Goldman Sachs expects Nvidia ’beat and raise,’ lifts price target to $240
Trane Technologies reported its third-quarter earnings for 2025, surpassing EPS expectations but falling short on revenue. The company reported an earnings per share (EPS) of $3.88, beating the forecast of $3.78, while revenue came in at $5.74 billion, slightly below the anticipated $5.79 billion. Despite the earnings beat, the stock experienced a pre-market decline of 2.36%, reflecting mixed investor sentiment.
Key Takeaways
- Trane Technologies’ EPS exceeded forecasts by 2.65%.
- Revenue fell short of expectations by 0.86%.
- The stock dropped 2.36% in pre-market trading.
- The company revised its full-year EPS guidance to $12.95-$13.05.
Company Performance
Trane Technologies showcased robust performance in Q3 2025, highlighted by a 4% organic revenue growth and a 15% increase in adjusted EPS. The company achieved record quarterly bookings of $6 billion, marking a 13% organic growth. These results underscore the firm’s strong position in the commercial HVAC and data center markets.
Financial Highlights
- Revenue: $5.74 billion, slightly below expectations.
- Earnings per share: $3.88, exceeding forecasts.
- Adjusted operating margin expanded by 170 basis points.
- 15% growth in adjusted EPS compared to the previous year.
Earnings vs. Forecast
Trane Technologies reported an EPS of $3.88, surpassing the forecast of $3.78 by 2.65%. However, revenue came in at $5.74 billion, missing the forecasted $5.79 billion by 0.86%. The EPS surprise indicates strong bottom-line management, while the revenue miss suggests challenges in meeting top-line expectations.
Market Reaction
Despite the positive earnings surprise, Trane Technologies’ stock fell by 2.36% in pre-market trading, with a pre-market price of $417.4. This decline suggests that investors may be concerned about the revenue shortfall or broader market conditions. The stock remains below its 52-week high of $476.19.
Outlook & Guidance
Trane Technologies revised its full-year EPS guidance to a range of $12.95 to $13.05, representing a 15-16% year-over-year growth. The company expects continued strong growth in the commercial HVAC sector through 2026, with improvements anticipated in the residential market and transport refrigeration by the second half of 2026.
Executive Commentary
CEO Dave Regnery emphasized the company’s commitment to sustainability, stating, "We’re proving that there is no tradeoff. What’s good for the environment is good for the bottom line." He also highlighted the strength of the current pipeline, noting, "I have not seen pipelines as strong as I see right now, probably ever in my career."
Risks and Challenges
- The revenue miss could indicate potential challenges in meeting future sales targets.
- Market saturation in the residential HVAC sector may impact growth.
- Macroeconomic pressures and supply chain disruptions pose ongoing risks.
- The transport refrigeration market’s expected recovery in 2026 may face delays.
Q&A
During the earnings call, analysts inquired about the company’s strategies for capital allocation and mergers and acquisitions (M&A). Executives addressed the potential for service margin improvements through software integration and discussed inventory challenges in the residential market.
Full transcript - Trane Technologies plc (TT) Q3 2025:
Carrie, Conference Operator: Good morning, my name is Carrie and I will be your conference operator today. At this time I would like to welcome everyone to the Trane Technologies Q3 2025 earnings conference call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker’s remarks, there will be a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question during this time, simply press star, then the number one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, please press star one again. As a courtesy to all participants, we ask that you limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. I will now turn the call over to Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Thanks, operator. Good morning and thank you for joining us for Trane Technologies third quarter 2025 earnings conference call. This call is being webcast on our website at tranetechnologies.com where you’ll find the accompanying presentation. We’re also recording and archiving this call on our website. Please go to slide 2. Statements made in today’s call that are not historical facts are considered forward-looking statements and are made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of federal securities law. Please see our SEC filings for a description of some of the factors that may cause our actual results to differ materially from anticipated results. This presentation also includes non-GAAP measures, which are explained in the financial tables attached to our news release. Joining me on today’s call are Dave Regnery, Chair and CEO, and Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO. With that, I’ll turn the call over to Dave.
Thanks, Zach, and everyone for joining today’s call. Please turn to slide number three. I’d like to open the call with a few thoughts on our purpose-driven strategy that fuels our strong performance over time. The demand for sustainable, resilient infrastructure has never been greater. That’s especially true here in the U.S. where the AI revolution and reshoring of industry are transforming how businesses operate at an unprecedented pace. Trane Technologies is at the heart of this evolution, helping customers reimagine their operations for greater performance and sustainability. Our high-efficiency solutions help our customers save energy and reduce operational costs. We’re proving that there is no tradeoff. What’s good for the environment is good for the bottom line. As we look ahead, our innovation and expertise continue to set us apart.
With our elevated backlog, robust customer demand, and strong financial performance, we are well positioned to continue to deliver long-term value to our employees, customers, shareholders, and the planet. Please turn to slide number four. Q3 was another strong quarter marked by record quarterly bookings of $6 billion, representing organic growth of 13% year over year. We delivered 170 basis points of adjusted operating margin expansion, 15% adjusted EPS growth, and robust free cash flow. Our global commercial HVAC businesses delivered outstanding performance. This was particularly true in the Americas where commercial HVAC bookings reached an all-time high, surging 30% year over year with applied bookings more than doubling. The strength of our commercial HVAC business is further underscored by our Q3 ending backlog of $7.2 billion. However, this total backlog figure does not tell the whole story.
Compared to year-end 2024, our Americas and EMEA commercial HVAC backlog has grown substantially, increasing by over $800 million or approximately 15%. Excluding residential, revenue growth remains robust, up approximately 10% in the third quarter. We are well positioned for growth in 2026 given strong execution through our business operating system and our rapidly expanding pipeline of projects in data centers and core verticals. Our leading innovation and direct sales force provide us with distinct competitive advantages. Our services business, which constitutes approximately one third of our total enterprise revenues, remains a durable and consistent growth driver, up low double digits year to date and boasting a low teens compound annual growth rate since 2020. Our guidance reflects the impact discussed during our September update, which Chris will elaborate on shortly. Please turn to slide number five. As discussed in our Americas segment, commercial HVAC continues to deliver standout performance.
The team achieved its third consecutive quarter of record-breaking bookings with approximately 30% growth. We are winning in both core vertical markets and high growth verticals such as data centers. In high growth verticals, customers demand innovative, highly engineered solutions tailored to their specific requirements. They need customer-focused partners with the expertise and capacity to grow alongside them, which plays to our strengths. Our direct sales strategy enables us to capture a significant share of these opportunities and consistently outgrow our end markets. This is demonstrated by our applied solutions bookings growth of over 100% in the third quarter. Commercial HVAC revenue growth was also robust, increasing by low teens in equipment and low double digits in services. Our consistent market outgrowth compounds revenues year after year. For perspective, in the third quarter our applied revenue growth on a three-year stack was up more than 125%.
Turning to residential, bookings and revenues declined approximately 30% and 20% respectively, consistent with the update we provided in September. In Americas transport refrigeration, bookings were up low teens while revenues were flat despite end markets being down over 25%. We continue to outperform. Commercial HVAC strength was not limited to the Americas. In EMEA, commercial HVAC bookings increased by high teens while revenues grew by mid single digits. Consistent with our expectations, EMEA transport bookings rose by high single digits while revenues declined by low single digits, outperforming end markets which were down mid single digits. In Asia Pacific, commercial HVAC bookings were up mid-30s while revenues grew low teens in the quarter. Growth was strongest in China, rebounding from the anniversary of our credit tightening policy in the prior year. The rest of Asia delivered solid performance. Now I’d like to turn the call over to Chris.
Chris, thanks Dave.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Please turn to slide number six. Dave covered many key points from this slide earlier, so I’ll keep my comments brief. Our organic revenue growth of 4% aligns with our September update where we shared our expectations for a $100 million revenue shortfall from our July guidance related to softer residential markets. Despite the challenging residential markets, we achieved strong margin expansion and EPS growth driven by robust growth on our commercial HVAC and services businesses, strong productivity levels, and prudent cost controls implemented early in the third quarter. Please turn to slide number seven. In the Americas, we delivered 4% organic revenue growth driven by strong volume growth at our commercial HVAC business and positive price realization, offset by a significant volume decline in our residential business. Adjusted EBITDA margins rose by 90 basis points to over 23%, supported by strong productivity and prudent cost management.
We also sustained high levels of business reinvestment. In EMEA, we delivered 3% organic revenue growth, primarily from volume growth in our commercial HVAC and transport businesses. Adjusted EBITDA margins declined by 60 basis points as expected, mainly due to year one M&A related integration costs, and improved sequentially from the second quarter. We have intensified channel investments and M&A this year to support growth and future opportunities, which are impacting near-term margins but strengthening our business for the long term. We also maintain high levels of business reinvestment. In Asia Pacific, organic revenue increased 9% due to strong volume growth and price realization. Adjusted EBITDA margins improved by 230 basis points, driven by strong volume growth in China and productivity across the segment. We also sustained high levels of business reinvestment. Now I’d like to turn the call back over to Dave.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Thanks Chris. Please turn to slide number 8. 2025 is unfolding as expected for most of our businesses, with the residential market slowdown being the most significant change impacting our outlook. Our commercial HVAC businesses globally are performing well, meeting or exceeding our expectations for the full year. Our Americas commercial HVAC business is executing at a very high level, significantly outperforming end markets. As mentioned earlier, both bookings and revenues are compounding at a high rate, especially in applied solutions. Our Americas commercial HVAC results are remarkably consistent with 3-year stack revenue growth of approximately 50% achieved in Q1 through Q3 of 2025 and expected for Q4 as well. Our residential business outlook remains unchanged from our September update with Q3 and expectations for Q4 revenue to be down approximately 20% each.
Compared to our July guidance, the combined revenue impact is a reduction of approximately $250 million, with $100 million in Q3 and $150 million in Q4 as channel inventory continues to normalize. Turning to the Americas Transport Markets, ACT’s forecast for 2025 has softened incrementally with the fourth quarter taking the brunt of the impact, now down more than 30%. Despite this, we expect to outperform in Q4 with revenues expected to be down approximately 10%. Our outlooks for EMEA and Asia remain unchanged. Now I’d like to turn the call back over to Chris. Thanks Dave.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Please turn to slide number nine. Our revised guidance anticipates approximately 6% organic revenue growth for the year, factoring in headwinds from the residential and transport Americas markets, as Dave mentioned earlier. In addition, our commercial HVAC Americas business saw the timing of some customer desired delivery dates move from Q4 into 2025. Altogether, the total impact of these headwinds is approximately 2 percentage points on 2025 revenue growth. Our 2025 adjusted EPS guidance range is now $12.95 to $13.05, up 15% to 16% year over year and incorporates the Q4 revenue headwinds previously discussed. We expect organic leverage of 30% plus in 2025 and believe we’re on pace for another year of 100% or greater free cash flow conversion. For the fourth quarter, we expect approximately 3% organic revenue growth driven by continued strong commercial HVAC growth.
Excluding residential, organic revenue growth is expected to remain robust at approximately 7%. We’re targeting organic leverage of approximately 30% in the fourth quarter, which includes strong business reinvestments for future market outgrowth. Consistent with our full year adjusted EPS guidance, we expect Q4 adjusted EPS to be in the range of $2.75 to $2.85. For additional details related to our guidance, please refer to slide number 17. Please turn to slide number ten. We remain committed to our balanced capital allocation strategy focused on deploying excess cash to maximize shareholder returns. First, we strengthen our core business through relentless reinvestment. Second, we maintain a strong balance sheet to ensure optionality as markets evolve. Third, we expect to deploy 100% of excess cash over time. Our approach includes strategic M&A to enhance long term returns and share repurchases when the stock trades below our calculated intrinsic value.
Please turn to slide number eleven. Year to date through October, we’ve deployed or committed approximately $2.4 billion through our balanced capital allocation strategy, including approximately $840 million to dividends, $160 million to M&A, $1.25 billion to share repurchases, and $150 million to debt retirement. These figures exclude $260 million from M&A and $100 million from share repurchases made early in the year, which were included in our fiscal year 2024 capital deployment targets. As discussed during our fourth quarter earnings call, we have approximately $5 billion remaining under our share repurchase authorization, providing us with significant share repurchase optionality. Our M&A pipeline remains active and we will continue to be disciplined in our approach. Overall, our strong free cash flow, liquidity, balance sheet, and substantial share repurchase authorization offer excellent capital allocation optionality as we move forward. Now I’d like to turn the call.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Back over to Dave. Thanks, Chris. Please turn to slide number 13. The Americas transport refrigeration markets have been dynamic, but the long-term outlook remains strong. ACT projects the trailer market to bottom in the first half of 2026, improve in the second half, and grow over 20% for the full year in 2027. ACT anticipates another significant increase with growth exceeding 40%. We are navigating the down cycle effectively and outperforming end markets. We continue to invest heavily in innovation and look forward to adding another growth driver to our portfolio when the market strengthens. Turning to slide number 14, we expect to provide 2026 guidance during our fourth quarter earnings call, but I’ll discuss our early views based on current insights. We expect continued strong growth in our commercial HVAC businesses, which make up 70% of our total revenues.
Our world-class direct sales and service teams give us a competitive edge, allowing us to pivot quickly across vertical markets to capture growth opportunities with the broadest and most innovative portfolio in the industry. We are relentlessly reinvesting to support a rapidly growing pipeline of opportunities. Our proven track record of compounding bookings and revenue growth, especially in high-growth verticals like data centers, underscores our strength as a leading climate innovator. Our commercial HVAC backlog is not only elevated, but growing, up more than $800 million from year-end 2024, positioning us well for continued strong growth in 2026 and beyond. In residential, which represents about 15% of our revenues, we believe over the long term that the industry remains fundamentally healthy.
With a GDP plus framework, we expect 2026 to be a tale of two halves, a challenging first half due to tough comps followed by improvement in the second half against easier comps. In our Americas transport business, accounting for about 7% of our revenues, we also foresee a tale of two halves with soft markets in the first half and recovery in the second. While the recovery slope may vary, we are aligned with freight markets recovering in the second half of 2026. Our focus on innovation yields healthy pricing opportunities, and our business operating system is primed to stay ahead of tariff and inflationary pressures. Our services business, comprising about one third of our enterprise revenues, is a key driver underpinning our growth in 2026 and years to come. We have a proven track record of driving strong services growth.
We see continued growth opportunities across our portfolio, particularly in commercial HVAC where our large and growing installed base and increasing mix of applied solutions carry a strong, higher-margin services tail. Additionally, our rapidly growing connected services portfolio is seeing increased demand for digital performance optimization and demand side management, where our energy services business excels. Overall, we are excited about the opportunities for continued growth in 2026. Please turn to slide number 15. In closing, our leading innovation, elevated backlog, and strong customer demand position us for strong performance in 2026 and beyond. Our uplifting culture continues to attract the best talent, powering our innovation. Our solutions offer strong returns to customers and also contribute to a sustainable world. This drives our consistent track record of performance and positions us to deliver differentiated value for shareholders over the long term. We would be happy to take your questions. Operator.
Carrie, Conference Operator: Thank you. At this time I would like to remind everyone if you would like to ask a question, please press Star, then the number one on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, we ask that you limit yourself to one question and one follow up. We’ll pause for just a moment to compile the Q&A roster. Your first question will come from Chris Snyder with Morgan Stanley.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Hey Chris, good morning. I wanted to ask about Americas margins. You know you guys put up a 40% incremental almost in Q2. Q3 was like a 50% despite negative mix away from Resi.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: I guess kind of my question.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Is really on the service margins, as the company adds technology and fixed.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Assets to the service or aftermarket business, is there an opportunity for service incremental?
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Margins to improve versus history? It feels like we’re effectively kind of replacing more variable human costs with.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: More static fixed costs, whether it be technology or something else. Any thoughts? There would be helpful. Hey Chris, this is Chris. I’ll go first, and then Dave may jump in. Very happy with the Americas margin performance in the third quarter. Operating income margins were nearly 22%, up 120 basis points on a year-over-year basis. When you think about service, we’ve described service margins to be higher than the segment average. They’re higher than equipment margins, and we continue to invest strongly in that space across front end tools, service technicians, sales, account managers. I think we like the path that those margins should be on going forward. There’s absolutely an opportunity for those margins to expand.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Yeah. The only thing I would add, Chris, we’re also investing heavily in our training organization. We just opened a new training center here in North Carolina. We want to make sure our techs have the best tools in front of them, in front of our customers. We want them to be the smartest as they can be. All of our connected solutions and our training, it all adds up to technicians that are more productive. By the way, our service business is growing at a very nice rate as a result of that.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Appreciate that.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Maybe going over to orders.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: You know, applied plus 100%.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Obviously pretty massive number. I know you know, you can’t.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Continue to grow orders 100%, obviously.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Is there anything, you know, in.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: That feels one timey, that’s worth calling out?
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: It does seem like, like.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: The pipeline, I think you refer to.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: It is rapidly growing, so it still feels like there’s a lot of opportunity out there.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Any, you know, kind of comment on that applied number and, you know, anything at the end market level would be helpful.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Thank you. A good question. Obviously, you know, we’re very strong in all of our verticals. Data center certainly had a lot of growth. We did see several large orders in the third quarter. You can think of a large order as over $100 million. I guess my framework has changed there. Yeah, we have had several large orders. I’ll just remind you that data center orders can be more uneven. You may see them in one quarter, not another. The pipeline of activity is what really, it’s really encouraging. I had the opportunity, I was walking to a meeting yesterday on campus and I ran into one of our chiller portfolio managers and this individual stopped me for what I thought was going to be two minutes.
It ended up being 15 minutes about telling me about all the robust demand that they’re seeing in the pipeline, the orders we’re receiving, the innovation that’s going to be coming out or is out now. There’s a lot of momentum out there right now and I would tell you that Trane Technologies is doing a great job of capturing more than our fair share of that momentum.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Thank you for that, Dave. Really appreciate it.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: All right, thanks, Chris. Thank you.
Carrie, Conference Operator: Your next question will come from Andy Kapowitz with Citigroup.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Hey, good morning everyone. Hey Andy, how are you?
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Good morning.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Good. How are you? Dave and Chris, you grew revenue low teens in Americas commercial HVAC equipment in Q3. Is there any reason why your growth there wouldn’t follow the reacceleration in Americas commercial HVAC bookings that you’ve seen lately and set you up actually for as good or stronger commercial HVAC organic revenue growth in 2026 versus 2025? Is the reacceleration in bookings, I mean, you talked about large projects. How are other verticals doing besides data centers?
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Andy, I’ll start. Look, the commercial HVAC Americas business has had a great year and it’s going to continue to perform strongly in the future. When you think about our full year guide for that business, we’re expecting revenues to be up low double digits this year. Q4 will be up around 10%. When you think on a three year stack for that business, it’s consistent every quarter this year, a three year stack of 50% revenues for our commercial HVAC business. Certainly the backlog and the order rates continue to give us more confidence on growth into the future. As you know, services really underpins that business as well. It’s about a third of the enterprise revenues. It’s roughly half of the commercial HVAC in the Americas revenues. We see that being a tailwind for many years to come as well.
We’ll dial in 2026 when we are on our next earnings call, but we’re expecting this business to continue to have strong growth going forward.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Yeah. The only thing I would add on the verticals, Andy, certainly very strong in data centers. Health care was also strong. Higher ed was strong. Government was strong. We’ll see how that goes with the government shutdown. Right now government was strong, and we also saw some strength in office, which was good to see. Overall, pretty balanced strength that we’re seeing out there in our core verticals as well as the high growth verticals. Great. You didn’t change your incremental revenue impact on residential HVAC in Q4 that you told us about in September, but can you give us more color on what you’re seeing in your channel? There’s obviously debate out there as to when inventories in residential will be right sized. I know you already talked about relatively weak first half of 2026, mainly due to tough comps.
Do you think inventories could get in balance by the end of the year? How do you think about that? Yeah, I mean, we’re hopeful it gets rebalanced. 2025 was such an odd year for residential, really. You had it started with a pre-buy. You could argue there maybe was two pre-buys with maybe a little bit pre-tariffs, and then you had this refrigerant change that didn’t go very well because of the canister issue that was well publicized. Then you had a really short summer across the U.S. Those three factors are kind of anomalies that we look at in the residential space. Obviously, that caused a bit of inventory in the channel that needs to be burned down. Our plan is hopefully it’s burned down by the end of the year. If not, it will certainly be burned down by the first quarter.
We’ll give you an update on that, Andy, when we present our fourth quarter earnings. Appreciate the color, guys.
Carrie, Conference Operator: Your next question will come from Julian Mitchell with Barclays.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Hi, good morning. Maybe I just wanted to understand a little bit the operating leverage guidance change. You’ve moved to sort of 30%+ there on the organic front. It’s a bit higher than before and that’s even with the revenue organic guide being lowered a touch overall. Maybe help us understand why is that operating leverage moving up? Does it reflect kind of exceptional cost control that may have to unwind a bit next year? Is it more to do with something in the shape of the business, particularly in commercial HVAC, that’s giving you that more structural entitlement to higher incrementals?
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Hey, Julian, it’s Chris.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Yeah, I think it’s first off.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: We manage all parts of the P&L. When I step back and I see the volume growth in commercial HVAC, we’re getting strong leverage on that volume growth. You’re right, there’s headwinds in the business we’ve described in residential and transport, and in the fourth quarter, some revenue shifting out to next year in commercial HVAC. We’re really offsetting nearly all of these headwinds on an EPS basis, really because we’re managing all parts of the P&L, multiple areas there. I mentioned volumes. There is strong cost management. Think of us as leveraging our scenario plans and our business operating system. Beginning part of the third quarter, when we saw the lower volumes in residential, we made sure that we were managing all parts of our cost. It’s a combination of discretionary cost control as well as some structural cost takeout. You’d expect that from a lean operator.
What we didn’t do, we haven’t cut investments. We’re preserving investments, and there’s a number of investments we had planned for the fourth quarter, and Dave was very clear and I, we’re not cutting those investments. We’re moving forward with those because they set us up for future growth. I’d look at the cost management, strong volumes in commercial, as well as making sure that we’re preserving investments.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Yeah, the only thing I would add is on the scenario planning what we really, really do well is it’s not just what you, it’s what you will not cut. We spend a lot of time on that. That’s why, as Chris said, we’re continuing to reinvest in all of our businesses and we have projects out there that we know are so important for our future that those are all ring-fenced. We make sure that those are things that we will not cut because they’re about our future. The teams do a great job there of identifying those and making sure that they’re going to be not only ready for a particular quarter but really well into the future. That’s great to hear. My follow-up would be around pricing.
Maybe just give us any color as to the price contribution to firm-wide revenues in the third quarter and within those residential Americas markets specifically. What’s your comfort level that price discipline can hold up as this inventory destock plays out?
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Julian price for the quarter was a bit above 3%. We’ve been tracking around 3% in the first half of the year, and from a full year guide perspective, think of the 6% organic revenue growth as roughly 3% price, 3% volume. I’d say we just continue to manage all the inflationary inputs well and ensuring that we’ve got a positive spread over price versus cost in residential. It’s really about a volume story there. We’re obviously shifting very much this year into 454B with a price mix contribution. There’ll be a little bit of carryover going into next year, but we’re also just making sure we’re staying ahead of a very dynamic environment in terms of cost inputs and remaining nimble.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: We will continue to do that under residential. The industries remain disciplined.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Julian.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: That’s great. Thank you. All right, thank you. Thank you.
Carrie, Conference Operator: Your next question will come from Amit Mehrocha with UBS.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Exceed. Dave. Hey Chris, how are you? I wanted to ask. I’m doing well, thanks. I wanted to ask about organic growth between the applied equipment and light commercial. I know together those grew low teens. Hopefully you can give us a little bit more color on just the applied equipment side and just given where the backlog and orders are for the equipment, obviously the sustainable growth opportunity in service, you know, those two are kind of 50% of the business. Do you think growth can be maintained at the current levels? Accelerate, decelerate because you have large numbers, what should be the right expectation prospectively for those growth rates for those two particular parts of the business? Yeah, look, applied was very strong, okay? Very strong. Unitary was positive. I guess that’s a good news. It has not been a big contributor this year to our growth.
We’ll see how it plays out next year. As far as services goes. Our service business is very consistent and we continue to put up nice growth rates there. If you go back to 2020, our compound annual growth rate, as I said in my prepared remarks, is it’s in the low teens, which is very, very strong. That doesn’t happen by accident. We have a very detailed operating system around our service business that allows us to do that. If you think about all what’s happening with our applied solutions and the installed base continuing to grow, the future is very, very bright for our service business. Just as a follow up maybe for Chris, the company, you know, you guys have this framework for top quartile revenue earnings growth kind of year in and year out.
I interpret that to mean kind of high single digit revenue growth, maybe low to mid teens EPS growth, obviously you’re achieving that this year, which is incredible in the context of what’s happening in the residential market. Just given kind of where the commercial HVAC business order momentum is, you know, hopefully Resi is better next year than it is this year. Obviously should be. Should we see an accelerating revenue and earnings algorithm next year? I would assume that would be the case, just given the headwinds you’re facing this year. Yeah.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Look, I think the future is bright. We’ll update investors in about three months at our next earnings call. We do go into each and every year thinking about how we’re going to plan for top quartile, top line growth, EPS growth, and let’s not forget about free cash flow conversion. With a four year average well over 100%, I think we’re one of the leaders in that space of converting that earnings to free cash flow. With down markets in residential and transport, we know the first half of 2026 is going to have some tough comps or tough start to the year. Okay. Off of tough comps, let’s see.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: How the full year looks.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: We’ll update you in a few more months. Things are dynamic, but certainly the growth of commercial HVAC and over 90% of that backlog is for commercial HVAC, of which the vast majority of that is applied solutions, gives us a lot of confidence that we’ll see strong growth in that business next year.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Got it. Okay, thank you very much. Thanks.
Carrie, Conference Operator: Your next question will come from Scott Davis with Milius Research.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Hey, good morning guys. Those applied bookings were big numbers. Is there any of that that’s leaking into 2027, guys? Or is that—I know the industry standard used to be kind of one year max lead time. Is it now leaking out a little longer than one year just given how strong demand is? Not really. I mean, I think there might be just a little bit in 2027. Most of it’s going to ship in the next 15 months. That’s kind of what we’re seeing.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Yeah, in the backlog in terms of some of the large orders, customers give us insight on what they’re going to place, but we won’t put it into the backlog until there’s a signed PO. There are slots, let’s say, that we’re expecting to be filled for 2027, but that will convert to orders here, you know, starting in the fourth quarter into 2026.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Yeah, the pipeline of activity, I know we had very strong and I’m proud of what the team was able to do. Third quarter, our pipeline of activity is extremely, extremely robust right now. Clearly, I just wanted to switch gears a little bit. You put out a press release two days ago on this thermal management system. The reference design for Nvidia, what’s new in that design, it looked like to me almost implied that you guys are.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Making the CDU and kind of doing the A to Z.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Just kind of maybe talk about what’s new in that design or the importance of it. If I told you, I wouldn’t be able to talk to you anymore. Now I’m okay. We’re working with Nvidia. They’re a leader obviously in the chip side of things. We’re helping basically as a leader in that vertical. I’ve been saying for a long time, we’re a leader in the data center vertical. We’re working with all influencers, whether it be hyperscalers or whether it be great companies like Nvidia that we’re working with. It’s really about our very technical engineers working with their technical engineers and coming up with solutions that in some cases we didn’t think were possible just a very short period of time ago. More to come on that. We’re excited about working with Nvidia.
We’ve been working with them for a while and we think there’s a lot of opportunities. The innovation that we’re seeing in the data center vertical is moving very, very fast and we’re there moving with it. I would also tell you that a lot of this innovation, as we develop, we’re pulling back into our core markets as well. It’s additive. We like being challenged, we like sitting at the table. We like them in our labs showing them what we can do. When smart people challenge each other, usually have great outcomes. Fair enough. Okay, best of luck, Dave, Chris, Zach.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: See you guys.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Thanks, Scott.
Carrie, Conference Operator: Your next question will come from Tommy Mold Stevens.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Good morning and thank you for taking my questions. Hey, Tommy, how are you? Good morning. Doing fine, thanks.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Wanted to ask about EMEA margins, which.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: We haven’t covered in enough detail yet.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Just given some of the comments you.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Made there about recent investments that have pressured those margin percentages a bit. What’s the timeline look like there? Or when, you know, assuming continued top line progression, you can start to see some positive margin dynamics.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Yeah, Tommy, look, the third quarter for our commercial HVAC business in EMEA came in really as expected for our second half guide. We knew that the revenue growth would be stronger in the fourth quarter than the third quarter, really based on the timing of when customers want their products. We also expected sequential margin improvement throughout the year, and we saw that also in the third quarter versus the second quarter. Some of that for their segment is really around some recent M&A that we’ve completed both in the transport channel and in the commercial HVAC channel that just on day one had lower margins than the segment average. We’ll work through that throughout the year. Those M&A transactions are very important to give us more opportunities for growth in the markets that they serve. We’re excited about that.
The region has continued to invest on its front end and sales and service portfolio. I think that’s largely anniversary at this point as we go into the fourth quarter. We would expect those margins to continue to grow and accelerate into 2026.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Thank you, Chris. If we zoom out and look at consolidated margins specifically next year, obviously you’re not going to guide today, but are there any variances to your typical planning cycle around the mid-20s conversion that are worth pointing out? Even if it’s just a seasonal comment, obviously there are a couple factors that weigh on the first half and then flip to tailwinds in the second half. Perhaps you could get some context around that. Thank you.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Nothing to call out specifically. I mean you called out our long-term framework at 25% or better incrementals, and we would go into any planning year thinking along that guidance. The pipelines Dave’s talked about in terms of orders and bookings, the pipelines for our investments in the company remain very, very strong. For us, it’s always been about how to pull them ahead to drive growth even faster. We’ll manage the two of them as we think about 2026. Appreciate your comment on first half. I do think for our transport market in the Americas and for residential, those will be tougher first halves in 2026 with expected growth in the second half, and we’ll put it all together and the goal would be let’s drive to top quartile financial performance again. We’ll update everyone in a few months.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Thank you, Chris.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: I’ll turn it back.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Thanks, Tommy. Thank you.
Carrie, Conference Operator: Your next question will come from Joe Ritchie with Scotiabank.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Hey guys, good morning. Hey Joe, how are you? Good morning. Doing great, thanks Dave. I want to just focus my questions on the data center opportunity and what you’re seeing today. If you think about the nature of the projects that you’re winning, I’m curious whether the nature of the projects has changed. What I’m speaking about specifically is, are you starting to see more modular type data centers getting built by the hyperscalers? The time to market is really important. Anything else you can tell us around the opportunities that you’re booking would be helpful. Yeah, we’ve seen that for a while.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Okay.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: I mean, the amount of stick build that you can reduce on a job site is obviously advantageous because it ensures a smoother build process. That’s been happening in the data center space for a while and we’re obviously, you could see all of our chillers being installed there. We’re part of that process. I wouldn’t say it’s a change, but I think it’s a great question though because I know we’re talking about data centers here, but if you think about other labor constraints and other verticals, that whole modular or less labor required on a job site is certainly something that will trend in the future. Yeah, that makes sense. Sorry, but that makes sense. I guess Dave just kind of think, going back to Scott’s question, just around lead times, right, you have certain parts of the value chain that are out.
Like think turbines are out like three to four years in terms of when they can get delivered. Given that your lead times right now are really kind of 12 to 18 months. It just seems like the opportunity for you, like you’ve just got a lot of like already. Based on what we’re seeing in the value chain, the opportunity for you guys should be really strong, really through the end of the decade. I know I don’t want to put the cart before the horse here, but just how are you thinking about this data center opportunity for you guys? End of the decade? I like it. Look, I think 12 to 18 months. First of all, that may not be our capacity. That may be what the, when the data, the data centers just given the hyperscale is giving us visibility for planning emphasis.
We’ve actually expanded our capacity. I had the team doing analysis 2023. We’ve expanded our chiller capacity by 4x. We’ve invested a lot there, but we’re ready for the growth. In some cases, our lead times now have actually contracted to a point where we have quick ship programs again. That’s not for data centers, but that’s for core verticals. The momentum we’re seeing is great to see. The innovation that we have is driving a lot of that momentum, and we are more than ready to make sure that we can meet the demand that’s being placed upon us. Great to hear. Thanks, guys. All right, thank you.
Carrie, Conference Operator: Your next question will come from Jeff Sprig with Vertical Research.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Hey, thanks. Good morning, everyone. Hey, Jeff. How are you? I’m doing great.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Not quite as good as you, but I can’t complain.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: You’re up in Connecticut, so you must be doing great, right? Yeah, yeah, things are good. My question maybe is a little bit related to sort of where Joe was at, but just thinking about all these large projects. Things must be slipping back and forth all the time. I don’t recall you calling out project slippage in the last couple of years like you are today with this $100 million. Just wondering, even though your.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Lead times are improving. Are we starting?
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: To bump up against just the ability for the supply chain, the construction community, whatever, to put this stuff in the ground at the pace they would like, or would you.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Just kind of characterize what you pointed.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Out today is just, you know, kind of normal noise and shipment patterns? I think it’s normal noise. We haven’t said anything that I would say is a trend, but we certainly had several, several customers ask us to wait until 2026 to ship product, which happens in our industry. We’re obviously never going to ship a product before it’s, you know, a job site is ready for it. I think it’s just timing and timing. Sometimes there’s positives and sometimes there’s negatives. It’s just in the fourth quarter, it’s probably more negative for us. We called out the $100 million that’s going to push into 2026. I wouldn’t read too much into that. The demand that we’re seeing right now is extremely strong, and you see that by our order rates. I’m not normal activity, not concerned about it.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Yeah, Jeff, I would add, just wanted to be transparent. We just kind of called it out because it was something we had. Our internal plans were stronger than that. With that news from those customers, we just wanted to be transparent in terms of that.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Great. Chris, a follow up for you. Maybe this was partially addressed in an earlier question, but the improvement in corporate, the pickup in other. Do those continue into 2026? Was there anything unusual there that normalizes? Also, just a $0.20 kind of deal related headwind. I think you still have a headwind next year, but a smaller headwind. Effectively it’s a tailwind in the P&L, right? Can you maybe just elaborate on that?
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Starting reverse. I think it is $0.20. The M&A this year is about a $0.20 headwind. Think of that as really the accounting requirements around amortization expense, and that’s typically heavier in those first few years of an acquisition. There’s also integration costs that we’ve got planned to really drive the synergies that we see in those businesses. It should be less of a headwind going into 2026. We’ll dial that in in a few months.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: You’re right, corporate was favorable.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Items below, below the line, were unfavorable. I call out other income, other expense unfavorable. Year over year, tax was actually a bit unfavorable in the third quarter. Very confident we’ll have tax favorable or at 20% for the full year. That means it’ll be a bit favorable in the fourth quarter versus, say, 20%, Jeff.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: I think, look, lots of investments.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Still, that make up our corporate structure. Some of the discretionary cost reductions, you know, reduction of say open roles, some of that does impact the corporate line as well. Ultimately, we’ll start on investments. We’ll start generally with corporate and then move into the segments as we see benefits. I wouldn’t read too much into it this year, but we’ll dial it in in a few months.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Okay, great.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: I’ll leave it there.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Thanks guys.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Appreciate it.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Thanks, Jim. Thanks.
Carrie, Conference Operator: Your next question will come from Andrew Oban with Bank of America.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Hi. Yes, good morning. How are you?
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Can you hear me?
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Sounds like you’re busy with the phones right now.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Yeah, just a question about institutional business. What’s the visibility like into 2026?
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: It seems the muni bond market is.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Getting better, and it seems that funding for schools and hospitals is getting better.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Does this mean that this business could accelerate into next year or where?
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Is the base in 2025? Because we haven’t spoken about it, this.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Business for a while.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Thank you.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Yeah, I think if you look across our pipelines, we have a lot of strength in all of our verticals. I think it’s a great question. Right now, I’ve been in this industry a long time and I would tell you that I have not seen pipelines as strong as I see right now, probably ever in my career. We’re very bullish on the momentum, especially in our commercial HVAC team, and really to me as well, that they have a lot of opportunities in front of them. The question specifically about institutions.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: You haven’t seen institutions slow down.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: This year, right, for you? Oh, healthcare was very strong. Education remains strong, especially on the higher ed side of things. No, we have not. The only thing that we’ve seen, at least in the third quarter, maybe a bit slower, and it’s always difficult to say a quarter makes a trend. Retail was slow, industrial slow, life sciences, I don’t like to pick on life sciences, but that continues to be a little bit of a Covid hangover there, I think. The rest of our markets were pretty strong. Just a follow up question on data centers, you know, do you need to build extra sort of muscle to service?
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: You know, because you do have fan.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Wall offerings, you have cross, you have CDUs.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: What does it take to be able to service inside the data center?
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Gray space versus sort of serving your
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Chillers that are sort of outside the building. Is there a discernible difference in what you need to do to your service workforce? Thank you.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: It really depends on the data center. The short answer is, look, we’re skilled at servicing all of our products. A really good question that you kind of reminded me of was this commissioning capability. This is again one of our strengths with our technicians. We have a lot of resources to make sure that all of these data centers get commissioned on time. Think of commissioning as when the mechanical contractor says, okay, this particular chiller is ready to go, we go in then and make sure that it’s going to operate the way it was designed. Call that commissioning. We have a lot of resources that we are able to rifle to any particular data center to make sure that it gets up and running on time. I could tell you that is something that I’m getting asked a lot of questions on about our capacity there.
It’s certainly one of our strengths. Thank you very much. Sure. Thank you.
Carrie, Conference Operator: Your next question will come from Nicole Deblaze with Deutsche Bank. Yeah, thanks. Good morning, guys.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Hey, Nicole, how are you?
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Good morning.
Carrie, Conference Operator: I’m good. How are you doing? Could we maybe talk about the step up that you guys saw in the EMEA bookings as well? Quarter pretty attractive, up 14%. Are you starting to see the data center orders really come through in a big way yet, or do you think that’s still to come in the pipeline?
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: We certainly have data center orders in all of our regions. Okay, EMEA, I’m trying to recall the third quarter. Nothing comes to mind. I would tell you that the data center orders in EMEA are a lot smaller from a, you know, the size of a data center is a lot smaller than what we’re seeing in the U.S. In the U.S., it could be as much as like one tenth the size. We have a lot of orders, they’re just smaller.
Carrie, Conference Operator: Okay, got it. That’s really helpful.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Color.
Carrie, Conference Operator: Could you guys comment on whether the price mix versus volume split in North America residential HVAC was in line with what you laid out at the Laguna conference in September? Also, thoughts on the annual price increase in 2026, if it will be kind of normal and if you think that customers are willing to accept it since price is up so much over the past few years. Thank you.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Hey, Nicole.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Yeah. The third quarter and our expectations for the fourth quarter are consistent with the September update. Revenues down about 20%. That would imply volumes down roughly 30%. The price mix impact would be favorable around 10%. Of the price mix, think of that as roughly 50/50, roughly 5 points plus or minus for each one of those attributes for 2026. We’re prepared to go into the year. We haven’t seen any structural changes within the industry. We’ll look at all the cost inputs that we have. We’ll look at where we’re driving for share. Ultimately, what we look for each of our businesses is to drive strong leverage, 25% or better. Price versus inflation is one of those levers we’ll look at. Typically, our price increases don’t come out until late, let’s call it December, January timeframe for the year.
We’ll update you in a few months on what that standing is for 2026.
Carrie, Conference Operator: Great, thank you. I’ll pass it on.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Thank you.
Carrie, Conference Operator: Your next question will come from Noah Kay with Oppenheimer.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Thanks for taking the questions, guys. Services has consistently had an attractive.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Margin profile, but I’m curious and it.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Perhaps goes a little bit to some of your earlier comments as you layer in BrainBox AI and some of the other software offerings into the toolkit. How do you think about a richer software mix impacting where service margins go?
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: How are you implementing that in some of the project management now? Yeah, great question. Look, we’re very happy with the BrainBox AI acquisition. Together, think of our Trane connected business. Now with BrainBox, we have over 65,000 connected buildings and we’re adding about one building every hour and the momentum is increasing. You’re spot on with your question. This is becoming, you know, I’m very bullish on the future as far as the connected service opportunities and how you optimize a building using AI. With BrainBox, we’re using agentic AI. This is where the agent is actually making the decision on how to run the building, looking at a vast amount of data. The margins are obviously very accretive when you’re able to deploy this type of software. We had a fast food, or it was a convenience goods store.
Think of thousands of locations and they gave us a pilot and we implemented, I think it was 50 of their stores and we ran the pilot for 90 days and the results were, you know, just, they were amazed by it. We were able to save the customer, it was north of 30% on their energy costs. It was a pilot of 50 stores. Obviously, they’re going to now run that through their entire portfolio. This is going to be a fast grower for us. It’s still early innings, but we’re excited about the opportunities there. As you said, when you start doing subscriptions, the margins are accretive.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Thanks, Dave. It’s great color.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: On a similar theme, when you.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Think about what you may want to add into the portfolio on an M&A basis next year, obviously continuing.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: To generate strong free cash flows.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: There’s dry powder there.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Should we think about continued.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Sort of software-centric, you know.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Are there any parts on the product side that are of particular interest? Yeah, I mean, I think we’re going to be. We’ll keep our options open. We get a chance to look at everything, as I’m sure you know, being a major HVACR player on a global basis. We’ll be opportunistic, but we’ll also be disciplined. I don’t know if you want.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: To add anything, Chris, I think the capital deployment framework has served us well for many years, and we’ll continue to balance without leaving any excess cash in the balance sheet. We’ll make sure we toggle that between M&A that meets our internal goals and something we can integrate well into the company, as well as toggle between, if not M&A, then share repurchases when it trades below our calculated intrinsic value. We’ll continue that expectation for many years to come.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: All right, thank you, guys. Thanks.
Carrie, Conference Operator: Your next question will come from Dean Dre with RBC Capital Markets.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Thank you.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Good morning, everyone. Hey, Dean, how are you? Good morning. I’m doing real well, thank you. I want to follow up on your exchange with Nicole on the data center demands by geography. If you just look at where the big build outs are happening now, like the Middle East, I would be surprised if they are smaller, smaller orders. Just maybe talk about the visibility by region and, you know, expectations from there. You’re spot on. In the Middle East, specifically Saudi Arabia, we’re seeing larger, larger data centers there. Specific to Europe, they tend to be smaller. Obviously in the United States there’s some big data centers that are being built. I would tell you that there’s even bigger data centers that are being planned right now. How about Asia? Yeah, we see in Asia as well.
We’re seeing some activity for sure in China, but more outside of China, specifically Singapore, Australia had some nice orders there. There’s activity there. It’s nothing as to the size of what we’re seeing in the United States right now. As you said, in the Middle East, specifically in Saudi Arabia, there’s a lot of activity as well. Yes, we’ve been hearing all about that. Just last one, can you give any comments or updates, insights into your investments in some of these liquid cooling startups? Yeah, as you know, we made an investment in LiquidStack several years ago. It’s going well. We continue to work with their team and they continue to work with us. You know, we like having partners like that. They’re innovative and we teach them, they teach us. One plus one often equals three or four.
We’ll continue to work with those types of innovative companies in the future. Good to hear. Thank you. Thanks, Dean. Thank you.
Carrie, Conference Operator: Your next question will come from Steve Tusa with JP Morgan.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Hey, good morning. Hey, Steve, how are you?
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Good morning. Congrats on the execution through a lot.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Of noise out there, these markets for sure. The backlog for commercial HVAC, you guys gave kind of a bit of a year to date increase, I think from year end just requires a little bit of math. What would that have been year over year for commercial HVAC backlog?
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Yeah, year over year enterprise backlog was roughly flattish, but similar to the walk from beginning of this year, Thermo King and residential backlog down about $300 million. Commercial HVAC Americas backlog up nearly $500 million on a year over year basis. The mix, and the mix of that backlog continues to shift more towards commercial HVAC.
Carrie, Conference Operator: Okay.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: That’s up like what, 6%, 7%?
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: From beginning of the year?
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: It’s up 7% from year over year, year over year on commercial HVAC.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Yeah, it’s probably in that range, probably mid to high single digits. Yes.
Carrie, Conference Operator: Okay.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Just the amount of forward sales in the backlog last year, I think you guys gave an enterprise number of like $4.1 billion or something like that. Where does that stand this year?
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Yeah, I would just say it’s stronger than last year. Okay. Obviously, we’ll continue to grow that front log for 2026 here into the fourth quarter. Lead times continue to, as we talked earlier, lead times continue to be contracting from last year’s time to this year. Dave mentioned a little bit around quick ship programs as an example where we have some opportunities. The absolute dollars of backlog for next year, they’re up.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: We’ll give you more of an update.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Update as we approach the Q4 earnings call. We would expect backlog to remain elevated going into 2026.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Yeah, just one last one on residential HVAC, maybe just the difference between your captive distribution and the independent.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Oh, for the quarter.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Yeah, for the quarter.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: I mean, we had sell through that was down in the high single digits range. Obviously our residential HVAC growth was down about 20%. I would say sell in was a little bit north of that, than the 20%, a little bit higher than that.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Yeah.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Okay, great. Thanks a lot. Really appreciate it.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Thanks, Dave.
Carrie, Conference Operator: Your final question will come from Nigel Coe with Wolf Research.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Oh, thanks, guys. Appreciate you going a bit further in the game here, Kevin. A lot of ground. You know, we’re scratching around when we talk about corporate, but maybe just talk about what we should dial.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: In for 4Q corporate.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: I think the M&A impact.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Went up by $0.05. I think we’re now looking at a $0.05 slightly greater impacting. $0.20 is the number for the year. I mean, how does that look into 2026? Does that $0.20 go to zero?
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Are we still dealing with some dilution there?
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Yeah, I’ll answer the second question first. I don’t think the $0.20 necessarily goes to zero. You know, our framework would be we want to make sure we’re EPS positive by the end of year three. While we’re very happy with the start of the BrainBox AI acquisition, there’s, you know, an early stage company. This is a lot of amortization associated with it. Let’s see what it is next year. I would expect it to be better, but wouldn’t necessarily think it goes to zero. Nigel, your question on Q4 corporate.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Yeah, the implied number for the quarter.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: is about $80 million. We’re making sure we have the dollars reserved for the investments that we want to make in the fourth quarter. That is how that math works out.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Okay. My follow on. I know services has got a fair.
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: Amount of airtime on the call. The consistent double-digit growth in services is pretty extraordinary. I think investors would appreciate if maybe just talk about how the service model has changed, Dave.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: What kind of confidence do you have?
Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO, Trane Technologies: That you can maintain, if not 10%, but being a high funded growth going forward.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Very happy with our growth rates. I’ll start there. Look, we continue to invest heavily in our services business. We have a whole business operating system built around it. We track lots of different metrics. I’m not going to create, you know, a roadmap for our competitors. I would just tell you that it’s a big part of our business. It’s a competitive advantage that we have and it doesn’t happen by accident. We’re investing heavily in it and you could see the outcomes that we’re able to drive. We’re very happy with our services. Okay, thank you. All right, thanks. Thanks, Nigel.
Carrie, Conference Operator: There are no further questions at this time. I would now like to turn the call back over to Zachary Nagle for any closing remarks.
Zachary Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations, Trane Technologies: Thanks, operator. I’d like to thank everyone for joining today’s call. As always, we’ll be available for questions in the coming days and weeks, and we look forward to seeing many of you on the road in the fourth quarter. Have a great day. Thank you.
Carrie, Conference Operator: Thank you for your participation. This does conclude today’s conference. You may now disconnect.
This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. For more information see our T&C.
